I live in NC. I got terminated from my job. I work in call center and was terminated because of performance, basically I got 5 write ups for different errors I made and the 5th resulted in termination. I met alot of other expectations in other metrics and received certificates and stuff for other areas of performance and kept some of these for records. Does it sound like I would be eligible?

Potentially eligible claimants must have become unemployed through no fault of their own. All claimants, except those who are still attached to an employer's payroll, must (a) register for work with ESC; (b) file a claim for each calendar week of benefits they request, and (c) actively seek work during any week for which unemployment benefits are claimed. Actively seeking work means doing those things that an unemployed person who wants to work would normally do. Unless otherwise instructed, a claimant must seek work in person on two different days with at least two different employers and must keep a written record of all work search contacts for periodic review by ESC.

Generally, "through no fault of your own" would indicate Reductions In Force (where you happened to have too little seniority or whatever to survive a general layoff), the company going out of business, seasonal layoffs, and, (perhaps), incapacitating disease or injury not incurred on the job.

You would need an actual legal determination (as in, see a lawyer) to know for sure, but as an unlicensed and not legally trained observer, I would rate "let go for reasons of job performance" to be pretty much "your own fault." (Even if you incurred the write-ups because you were reporting to an ogre who was deliberately gigging you falsely, the fact that the company let you go as a result of a performance standard would seem to preclude a "not your fault" defense.)

Not your lawyer etc.. and it varies by state, but where I am, the standard is very pro-employee. The employee has to do (or not do) a specific thing with the explicit knowledge that he will be fired if he does it. You wouldn't know that by reading the statute by itself--gotta read the cases and see how it works on the ground.

I represent employers and lose cases like yours regularly.

You should talk to a local unemployment attorney, or at least legal aid. One visit might be all you need, just to figure out if you even need an atty to represent you through the process. In my state, employees generally don't have lawyers unless the case is appealed up into the court system (out of the administrative realm).

In other words, don't let the wording of that statute stop you from trying to collect.

Again, you should consult a lawyer (or go ahead and apply for benefits -- they'll let you know quickly enough). But, very generally speaking, "though no fault of your own" for the purposes of unemployment benefits, means you didn't quit the job. If you were fired or dismissed against your will, you will generally be eligible.

Again, you should consult a lawyer (or go ahead and apply for benefits -- they'll let you know quickly enough). But, very generally speaking, "though no fault of your own" for the purposes of unemployment benefits, means you didn't quit the job. If you were fired or dismissed against your will, you will generally be eligible.

IANAL, YMMV, etc.
Here is NJ, if you are fired for cause, such as documented job performance deficiencies, you are not eligible for unemployment, at least not right away.

If you were fired or discharged from your job because you did something not in the best interests of your employer (like breaking company rules or policy), you may be disqualified from collecting benefits. This kind of discharge is known as "misconduct." The disqualification would begin the week the firing or suspension occurs and continue for the next five weeks. After the disqualification period ends, you may be able to collect benefits.

Not your lawyer etc.. and it varies by state, but where I am, the standard is very pro-employee. The employee has to do (or not do) a specific thing with the explicit knowledge that he will be fired if he does it. You wouldn't know that by reading the statute by itself--gotta read the cases and see how it works on the ground.

I represent employers and lose cases like yours regularly.

You should talk to a local unemployment attorney, or at least legal aid. One visit might be all you need, just to figure out if you even need an atty to represent you through the process. In my state, employees generally don't have lawyers unless the case is appealed up into the court system (out of the administrative realm).

In other words, don't let the wording of that statute stop you from trying to collect.

Again, YMMV-not legal advice--not your atty

Flipshod's advice here is very much in accord with my own experience. In fact, don't even contact an attorney until you've filed for benefits and been denied; the ESC counselors are likely to approve you for benefits even on the terms you outline.

Having lost a North Carolina job with a series of I-believe-pretexts cited as reason for dismissal, the review of the case by ESC was farly cursory after asking for and obtaining explanation from my ex-employer, and resulted in an award of benefits not delayed past the SOP waiting period.

Essentially, NC policy appears to be that:

You were dismissed from the job rather than quitting on your own accord; and

The reason for your dismissal was not one single act that egregiously violated the law or the terms of your employment. (Theft from the business, selling company secrets to the competition, sleeping through your shift as night watchman, having sex with a fellow employee on company time, etc.) Unsatisfactory performance over a period of time does not constitute "fault of your own."

I am not your lawyer, or a lawyer of any sort, and I am especially not someone versed in the practice of North Carolina unemployment law. But I think I can state with 99% confidence that you're eligible to draw unemployment in this state while looking for work.

IANAL, however, in my unfortunate experience, the opinions stated above are correct. If you didn't do anything illegal, and showed up when scheduled, you are probably eligible.

Otherwise it would be pretty easy for companies to rig "poor performance" anytime they wanted to conduct a de-facto layoff.

In fact, moving the goalposts is one tactic used by unscrupulous managers to try to force an employee to quit, or to force a "with cause" offence. If done subtly enough, the employee might even be manipulated into believing they are at fault.

If you were fired or discharged from your job because you did something not in the best interests of your employer (like breaking company rules or policy), you may be disqualified from collecting benefits. This kind of discharge is known as "misconduct." The disqualification would begin the week the firing or suspension occurs and continue for the next five weeks. After the disqualification period ends, you may be able to collect benefits.

When my employer contested my unemployment in NY, the judge specifically said that incompetence is not misconduct.He said misconduct would be stealing, repeated lateness, that sort of thing. The fact that I was short money in the till wasn't misconduct, it was incompetence, and I got my benefits.

I worked in management for one of the big corporations that runs call centers (in NC as well, incidentally). You should file. Depending on your state, you may not win, but that's for a judge to decide. We kept a paper trail a mile long and would put off firing people nearly indefinitely because it was so difficult to win these cases. You were written up five times, so you know there's documentation against you. Be prepared to give your response as to what happened, how was the discipline presented to you, did you take corrective action, did they offer you training and so on. Those certificates that you have might be helpful in presenting you as a better employee than they will state.

Call centers are notoriously bad in their management. It doesn't hurt to file and hope for the best - they could easily lose their documentation, have a turnover in management, or whatever, and decide not even to contest it.

Here's how it worked basically went for me (from the employer side):
- We had to pay the unemployment until the trial -- so, at least, it's a free loan (in my state).
- The trial was set up by telephone with me, our company's lawyer, and the employee (who did not have a lawyer).
- It was largely not very formal. The judge went over the documents that we had provided. I faxed in copies of all of the written warnings to the court, who provided them to the judge and the employee.
- Both sides answered questions and basically presented their point of view.
- Some weeks later, we got notification of the outcome.

We won, but it was a different case - attendance, rather than the more nebulous "performance". Also, the employee didn't contest that she missed the time or that she had gotten a warning, but instead tried to say it wasn't fair because I didn't like her personally. The judge basically told her that didn't matter.

Definitely give it a shot. And go to Legal Aid. If you can afford a lawyer to represent you, fine, but it's actually pretty tough to find a lawyer who does employee-side unemployment outside of Legal Aid. There's just not a lot of money in it.

FWIW, as others have said, "no fault of your own" comes with its own technical gloss. In most cases (and jurisdictions) incompetence is not considered good cause for termination. But see, Tzangas, Plakas & Mannos v. Administrator (it can be in Ohio, in some cases).

My company just payed a couple of unemployment claims for incompetence-related terminations.

It doesn't cost you anything to file a claim. File it and see what happens. Good luck.

__________________
None of this is legal advice. Ever. You aren't my client. I'm not your lawyer. Most of what I'm telling you is probably wrong. Give up.

For the last 2 1/2 years I have been a paid caretaker for my disabled Aunt. This is not my normal line of work I only did this work because it was needed and my late father in law asked me if I would be the caretaker for his disabled sister because none of the other caretakers were working out and he would rather have a family member caring for her, so I agreed to become her caretaker at his request. She has recently passed and I let the company I was working for that I would not be continuing with the company as my aunt has passed and I am going to look for work in a field that I would normally work in. Would I be able to file for and receive unemployment benefits while Im looking for work.

For the last 2 1/2 years I have been a paid caretaker for my disabled Aunt. This is not my normal line of work I only did this work because it was needed and my late father in law asked me if I would be the caretaker for his disabled sister because none of the other caretakers were working out and he would rather have a family member caring for her, so I agreed to become her caretaker at his request. She has recently passed and I let the company I was working for that I would not be continuing with the company as my aunt has passed and I am going to look for work in a field that I would normally work in. Would I be able to file for and receive unemployment benefits while Im looking for work.

I'm not a lawyer, nor an expert in unemployment, but you're the one who's choosing to end your employment there. As I understand it, unemployment insurance (at least in the U.S.) is only available if you lose your job due to a decision on the part of your employer (e.g., a layoff, the location or company closes, etc.), and if that decision isn't due to your job performance (i.e., you weren't let go "with cause.")

You're choosing to leave the company of your own volition, which isn't what unemployment benefits cover.

For the last 2 1/2 years I have been a paid caretaker for my disabled Aunt. This is not my normal line of work I only did this work because it was needed and my late father in law asked me if I would be the caretaker for his disabled sister because none of the other caretakers were working out and he would rather have a family member caring for her, so I agreed to become her caretaker at his request. She has recently passed and I let the company I was working for that I would not be continuing with the company as my aunt has passed and I am going to look for work in a field that I would normally work in. Would I be able to file for and receive unemployment benefits while Im looking for work.

IANAL ... in effect you are quitting ... and generally one can't collect Unemployment Insurance when they quit a job ... however you didn't say this company had another client lined up for you ... maybe if you file they'll report back "lack of work" ... then perhaps you would be eligible ... it may well be cheaper for the company rather than hire a lawyer to fight this ...

I live in NC. I got terminated from my job. I work in call center and was terminated because of performance, basically I got 5 write ups for different errors I made and the 5th resulted in termination. I met alot of other expectations in other metrics and received certificates and stuff for other areas of performance and kept some of these for records. Does it sound like I would be eligible?

I'd say that being terminated for performance is pretty much the definition of being terminated for reasons that ARE your fault.

Ergo, I'd say you're ineligible, but there's no harm in double-checking and seeing if that's indeed the case.

I'd say that being terminated for performance is pretty much the definition of being terminated for reasons that ARE your fault.

Ergo, I'd say you're ineligible, but there's no harm in double-checking and seeing if that's indeed the case.

That's a common misunderstanding. You can be fired for literally anything. "For cause" usually means you were breaking the law, or just not showing up. If you were fired because the employer didn't think you were doing X, Y, and Z job duties to his satisfaction, that's usually not considered your fault for unemployment insurance purposes.

I'm no expert, but I was fired once and received unemployment benefits anyway.

The general rule is that unemployment benefits are available unless (1) you abandoned or quit a job, or (2) were terminated for misconduct. That is a far higher bar than "for cause" or "for just cause." It implies taking actions which are directly against the employer's interests - stealing, repeated insubordination, violence, intoxication, and so on.

Yes, being fired for poor performance makes you eligible in most states. You'll want the unemployment office to make a determination though, because I had a friend who filed and they came and took the money back later on because he had been fired for cause. In his specific case, it was always being late, which probably counts more as misconduct then poor performance.

I think what the basic idea is, is that if someone is a poor fit for a job for whatever reason, but makes a good faith effort to work but still fails, then they are unemployed through no fault of their own. But definitely apply, you could very well be eligible.

So that last one might be a problem if 3 of the 5 times were within the last 12 months. But despite differences in state laws, which make examples from other states of limited value, a practical factor extending across jurisdictions is that the employer has to contest it, and may not. If a lawyer would tell you in a free consultation whether it was worth filing with your facts in NC, maybe consult one. But I don't see a reason to pay for advice on this. Just apply and see.